Wax moths come in two flavours – lesser and greater. They are both of the same tribe, Galleriini. (Tribe is the scientific classification between Family and Genus.) The Lesser Wax Moth is the lesser of your worries. It’s smaller and less destructive. Its bigger cousin, the Greater Wax Moth, can kill colonies so we’ll take a moment to consider it.

If you are a northern beekeeper, as we are here in Alberta, Canada, you don’t fret much about the greater wax moth. Frost kills it. Beehive equipment stored in an unheated shed receive all the treatment necessary to destroy wax moths. In a hot climate, the wax moth is repelled by strong hives and the wax moth worms never take much of a bite out of a hive. But weak hives are vulnerable, as are honey boxes stored in warm places.

The wax moth sneaks into unoccupied comb or poorly defended hives and lays eggs. These become worms – larvae or caterpillars – which wriggle around on the combs, eating wax and pollen, weaving cobwebs, and crapping all over the place. They are nasty dirty. Not only do they eat your equipment, they leave behind a mess that can make you puke as you scrape and clean, then refit new sheets of foundation in the old frames. Welcome to beekeeping. The greater wax worm costs beekeepers millions of dollars worldwide in lost equipment, smaller honey crops, labour costs, and even defeated colonies that need restocked. But they have an upside.

Honey bees are susceptible to diseases such as American Foulbrood. A wild hive inside a hollow tree eventually picks up AFB, becomes weak, and succumbs to wax moths. The worms of the moths eat the hive’s wax, honey, and pollen while the sick colony dies. This eliminates old diseased combs that might contaminate other honey bee colonies for years.

The greater wax moth offers another bonus. For a couple of centuries, southern fishermen have set aside an old comb or two for the moths to invade, then they’d pick off the fat juicy worms for fish bait. I’m told that bass and catfish love the treats, though I have no idea how they acquired a taste for a worm that originally lived on wax combs in hollow trees. But I don’t question a fisherman’s success. I’ve enjoyed properly prepared, pan-fried aquatic craniates lured from ponds by plump wax worms.

We – the humans of planet Earth – produce over 300 million tonnes of plastic each year. (That’s about one and a half kilos each week for each of us.) The stuff is made from carbon (mostly from petroleum) but it doesn’t easily convert back to its original natural state once it has been fashioned into shopping bags, yogurt containers, and Barbie dolls. Those products – so essential for to our modern society – last hundreds of years in landfills or bobbing around in the sea. But, as the wax moth discovery suggests, plastic may be eaten by worms. If so, the crappy mess found in beehives might perform a delightful garbage dump chore.

Credit for the observation that wax worms eat plastic bags goes to backyard beekeeper Federica Bertocchini, a Spanish biologist. Two years ago, she bagged some wax worms that had invaded one of her hives. An hour after incarcerating them in the baggie, they were eating their way toward freedom. This event was reported to fellow scientists at the University of Cantabria where they initiated a plastic-eating project. They soon discovered that 100 wax worms eat about 100 milligrams of polyethylene in twelve hours. A thousand such worms (not an uncommon number in a hive of bees overrun by wax moths) might eat an entire plastic bag every two days.

The next step was to figure out whether the worms were simply shredding the plastic to tiny bits (which would not really be breaking down the long carbon polymers) or converting the material into food instead (the ideal biodegradation of plastic).

It turns out that wax worms produce an enzyme that reduces polymers to edible compounds which are no longer plastic. They evolved the enzyme during their millions of years of cleaning up diseased honey bee nests. At the molecular level, beeswax and modern polymers share a similar carbon backbone structure. Wax worms actually digest beeswax and they do the same with plastic, using the worms’ same chemicals.

In their lab, the scientists made warm wax worm soup (or Worm Puree – you can make this at home with your own blender, if you like). Smearing the liquefied worms onto plastic, they observed the biodegrading property. It works, but application is slow, awkward, and messy. And it takes a lot of dead worms, which would raise eyebrows over at PETA. So, the scientists are studying the worms’ chemical compounds and hoping to graft enzyme-producing genetic alleles into bacteria (whose advocacy group is less vocal than PETA). The goal is to spray the engineered bacteria around our landfills, quietly converting plastic bags into grease puddles. Just don’t park your Saturn SL1 too close.

Let them eat plastic.

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About Ron Miksha

Ron Miksha is a bee ecologist working at the University of Calgary. He is also a geophysicist and does a bit of science writing and blogging. Ron has worked as a radio broadcaster, a beekeeper, and Earth scientist. (Ask him about seismic waves.) He's based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Ron has written two books, dozens of magazine and journal articles, and complements his first book, Bad Beekeeping, with the blog at badbeekeepingblog.com. Ron wrote his most recent book, The Mountain Mystery, for everyone who has looked at a mountain and wondered what miracles of nature set it upon the landscape. For more about Ron, including some cool pictures taken when he was a teenager, please check Ron's site: miksha.com.

9 Responses to Fishing Bait That Eats Plastic

I have a few comments to make about this ecological niche creature—SHB and the wax moths are simply decomposers of the detritus of biological processes. As much as the piece paints their occupation and products as “nasty”—that is a perjorative invented by humans. If we did not have huge numbers of these creatures digesting the waste of our planet, we would have long ago sunk under the overlay of the undecomposed pile—not to mention the plastics that present greater problems at bioremediation, and which only humans have made to cause injury and damage to our world. I always tell my students, SHB and HM do not KILL hives—they invade to do the job they are designed to do when the hive is suffering from some underlying problem—probably queen issues. A good beek learns the signs of a struggling hive and remedies it before the HM or SHB move in. You see the same creatures in a compost bin—they are not picky.

Susan, thanks for your comments – they always add a lot to the discussion. I thought I did an OK job explaining that the wax moths’ nasty little worms have an important ecological role to play. I use the word ‘nasty’ for two reasons. Levity, which readers occasionally mistake for gravity; and, because the worms and their debris are nasty. I think such sights and odours are intended to produce a human gag reflex to prevent stupid consumption of unhealthy foods. I’m not likely to eat honey from a comb covered in wax worm dung and webs. It’s too nasty for my tastes.